Description
What started as a Ph.D thesis from a young computer scientist in Kyoto has turned into a phenomenon in Japan and begun to take hold in Korea.
The now Dr. DaHuang Pyo had been intrigued by the shockwaves in the medical field from AI and big-data analysis; trends we could never have spotted on our own emerged and research from computers that never sleep discovered breakthrough results. The doctor had remembered what he went through to get where he was and the support he had needed to keep moving forward with it. With technology in our lives like never before, DaHuang Pyo wanted to apply the same principals to mental health. Partnering with psychologists in and around the university, he was able to train an AI to accurately diagnose mental status through signals read by the Brainstorm chip.
With his the bulk of his technical research completed and his hard-earned degree, the doctor went on to found his own company, dragging several of his psychologist partners with him, to create an AI personal therapist. Project Misa entered the market as a subscription based AI personality to help users understand their mental situation and teach them to cope with it and even recover. It launched with resounding success in his home country. With such a large data pool to analyze, the product became better and better, identifying issues with ease and leading its clients through their mental battles with precisely selected behavior and conversation. The product has broadened and clarified the scientific understanding of the human mind to an incredible degree.
However, to Dr. DaHuang Pyo's resent, waifu culture in Japan and other nations has embraced his creation, seeking to use it as replacement for human connection. The doctor is currently in Korea, where he is leading marketing efforts in hopes that the traction the product is picking up here doesn't end up repeating that trend.
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Description
What started as a Ph.D thesis from a young computer scientist in Kyoto has turned into a phenomenon in Japan and begun to take hold in Korea.
The now Dr. DaHuang Pyo had been intrigued by the shockwaves in the medical field from AI and big-data analysis; trends we could never have spotted on our own emerged and research from computers that never sleep discovered breakthrough results. The doctor had remembered what he went through to get where he was and the support he had needed to keep moving forward with it. With technology in our lives like never before, DaHuang Pyo wanted to apply the same principals to mental health. Partnering with psychologists in and around the university, he was able to train an AI to accurately diagnose mental status through signals read by the Brainstorm chip.
With his the bulk of his technical research completed and his hard-earned degree, the doctor went on to found his own company, dragging several of his psychologist partners with him, to create an AI personal therapist. Project Misa entered the market as a subscription based AI personality to help users understand their mental situation and teach them to cope with it and even recover. It launched with resounding success in his home country. With such a large data pool to analyze, the product became better and better, identifying issues with ease and leading its clients through their mental battles with precisely selected behavior and conversation. The product has broadened and clarified the scientific understanding of the human mind to an incredible degree.
However, to Dr. DaHuang Pyo's resent, waifu culture in Japan and other nations has embraced his creation, seeking to use it as replacement for human connection. The doctor is currently in Korea, where he is leading marketing efforts in hopes that the traction the product is picking up here doesn't end up repeating that trend.